NASCAR notebook: Harvick rallies from four laps down
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[April 08, 2019]
BRISTOL, Tenn. - Kevin Harvick
finished 13th and on the lead lap in Sunday's Food City 500, and
that's about as amazing of a comeback as you're likely to see at
Bristol Motor Speedway.
Making up a lap, perhaps two, is difficult. Harvick, at one point,
was four laps in arrears.
Down. Out. Finished. Done.
Thanks to an incredibly fast No. 4 Ford Mustang, the 2014 Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion was able to race his way back onto
the lead lap and into the picture.
The day certainly didn't start out well -- the team failed pre-race
inspection three times and was penalized before the race had even
begun.
Because of the inspection issues, Harvick dropped from 13th to the
rear of the field at the start of the race; one crew member was
ejected, the driver had to do a pass-through penalty under green
once the race began and the team will lose 30 minutes of practice
time at the next points event.
His first break came when he hit pit road after the green flag -- a
multi-car incident brought out the caution flag and Harvick only
lost one lap in the pits.
But a loose wheel put his No. 4 back on pit road a short time later
and Harvick soon found himself multiple laps down.
He joined the lead-lap cars during the final caution of the race
when he was in the free pass position.
The finish was his worst since a 26th-place run at Daytona this
year. But it may have been one of the team's most impressive efforts
overall.
POWER BUT NO STEERING
It was a frustrating day for pole winner Chase Elliott as the
Hendrick Motorsports driver lost the power steering in his No. 9
Chevrolet barely 20 laps into the race, then was involved in an
incident just shy of the halfway point of the 500-lap race.
Despite the setbacks, he was still contending for a spot in the top
10 when his car hit the wall with less than 70 laps remaining. He
led the first 38 laps of the race, finished 11th and on the lead
lap, but saw a good day otherwise ruined.
"Definitely not what we started out hoping for," he said. "We got
turned late in the race, that was about it. We fell behind from
there.
"I had a great car, even without the power steering."
HAMLIN SHOULDERS BLAME
Denny Hamlin, the series' most recent winner heading into the
Bristol race weekend, appeared to have made the move of the race
when a two-tire call under caution at lap 417 put him out front for
the subsequent restart.
The lead was short-lived. Hamlin was penalized for speeding on pit
road -- something that's been the Joe Gibbs Racing driver's Achilles
heel -- and was forced to give up the valuable track position.
He did manage to rally and finish fifth, however.
"I screwed up our strategy on pit lane," Hamlin admitted. "We'll get
it cleaned up. Just got to work through all the kinks and clean
stuff up.
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Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Kevin Harvick (4) sits in
his car during practice for the O'Reilly Auto Parts 500 at Texas
Motor Speedway. Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
"We didn't have a race-winning car. Top-five finish with a car that
probably shouldn't have been there is a good day."
Hamlin won the season-opening Daytona 500 as well as last weekend's
O'Reilly Auto Parts 500 at Texas Motor Speedway. The TMS win came
after he rallied from a, you guessed it, pit road speeding penalty.
MISSED OPPORTUNITY FOR BOWYER
Clint Bowyer led five times for 24 laps and had one of the best
long-run cars in the field Sunday. But contact with Joey Logano on
lap 432 resulted in a flat tire for the Stewart-Haas driver and put
the team in catch-up mode for the remainder of the race.
"He was racing me pretty hard," Bowyer said of Logano. .".. We just
barely touched, and it must have cut the valve stem out of it or
something and hit it just right."
Bowyer managed a seventh-place finish in spite of the setback.
"My strong suit, just like last week, was long runs," he said. "We
just slowly kept picking them away. You could see that on restarts.
I couldn't take off worth a damn, but I could really come on strong
on the big end of a run."
PENSKE STABLE SETS PACE
The cars of Team Penske teammates Logano, Brad Keselowski and Ryan
Blaney were among the best for much of the Food City 500 and two of
the three -- Logano and Blaney -- finished third and fourth
respectively. Combined, the trio led 344 of the race's 500 laps.
"The last thing you want is a caution with 15 to 20 (laps) to go at
Bristol and you're the leader because you know everyone is going to
make their decision based off what you do," said Logano, who found
himself in exactly that predicament.
"If you stay out, you've got to expect half the field is going to
pit, maybe more. If you come in, five or six stayed (out), so it's
just part of the game."
Keselowski appeared to be in line for a shot at the win as well, but
confusion when the field was reset for the final restart left the
former series champion mired in a three-wide situation coming to the
green.
He was eventually issued a pass-through penalty and finished 18th.
"Nobody could figure out the lineup," Keselowski said. "There wasn't
enough communication and it was just a tough deal."
--By Kenny Bruce, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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